RICHARD GIRAGOSIAN

Nagorno-Karabakh: The growing rick of 'war by accident'

For European security, the war in Ukraine stands as a pressing test of Western commitment and resolve. But there is another emerging security threat, with a real risk of rapid escalation, and it is close to Turkey. This new threat, emanating from the Nagorno-Karabakh region, pits Armenia and the Armenian-populated Karabakh against Azerbaijan. Long regarded as one of several “frozen” conflicts within the former Soviet space, in recent years, fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh has transformed the definition from a “frozen” to a kinetic conflict. And in rebuke to ongoing diplomatic mediation by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), April 2016 marked the most intensive fighting since the early 1990s.

The danger of western “benign neglect”

But as a geographically remote and simmering conflict, the geopolitical implications of the obscure Nagorno-Karabakh region have been largely underestimated. And despite a lumbering peace process endowed with neither peace nor much of a process, the conflict has been prone to a period of Western benign neglect. Such strategic inattention is especially dangerous, for three main reasons.

First, from a broader strategic perspective, the Karabakh conflict stands out as the one local dispute with the inherent risk of quickly expanding in the event of renewed hostilities. More specifically, this conflict has the potential to compel the direct engagement of several larger regional powers, whereby a repeat of combat operations in the recent “four-day war” in April 2016 will force Turkey, Russia and even Iran to respond. And mirroring the miscalculation and forced compulsion to act, Karabakh may trigger a much wider World War I style escalation of confrontation, and thereby threatening Turkey’s relationship with Russia.

The second driver for concern stems from the likely Russian response to renewed fighting. As with the fighting last year, Russia was the only player capable of reacting quickly to effectively halt the fighting. But unlike that experience, Russia is more prepared this time and may leverage the fighting for an opportunity to deploy Russian peacekeepers to the region. Such a scenario of Russian power projection could be feasible, as only Russia holds a position to respond, and would be likely, as the lack of any Russian presence in Nagorno-Karabakh has long been seen in Moscow as an unacceptable weakness.

And from a European perspective, such a scenario would only consolidate Russian dominance over this part of the so-called “near abroad,” thereby effectively ceding the area to Russia’s sphere of influence. And this third factor would also greatly endanger recent moves by the EU to engage both Armenia, which is set to sign a new agreement in November, and Azerbaijan, whose renewed interest in a new strategic partnership with the EU is a welcome success for Brussels.

The imperative to engage

Against this backdrop of escalating tension and a real risk of renewed fighting, there is an imperative to de-escalate the Karabakh conflict through engagement, in two areas. First, with the promise of cooperation over confrontation, the EU could work with, rather than against Russian interests, by seeking a more ambitious policy of engaging local officials and actors in Nagorno-Karabakh. Based on a “status-neutral” approach where any such engagement in Karabakh would infer neither recognition nor recrimination, the EU could bolster the stalled diplomatic process by leveraging both Armenia’s interest in the EU and Azerbaijan’s frustration with the lack of progress from the peace process.

The necessity for compromise and concession

The second opportunity is both more tangible and more viable, and involves direct support for “track two” efforts between Armenia, Karabakh and Azerbaijan. With the synergy and success of similar “people-to-people” contact between Armenia and Turkey, this focus on track two engagement would focus on three key objectives: to elevate the level of discourse and challenge the conflict narrative in each country; to provide the political cover and widen the space for further official contacts; and to invest in the preparation of each society for the necessity of compromise, an essential step that has been seriously neglected in each case.

And preparation of society for the necessity of compromise and concession would also encourage Armenia and Turkey to re-engage, and to restart the suspended diplomatic process of “normalization.” Thus, given the strategic significance of the emerging threat form renewed war over Nagorno-Karabakh, the imperative is to engage now, before this kinetic conflict spirals dangerously out of control.

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Agos was founded in 1996 by Hrant Dink and a group of his friends, in order to report the problems of the Armenians of Turkey to the public. It is the first newspaper in the Republican period to be published in Turkish and Armenian. Agos's editorial policy focuses on issues such as democratization, minority rights, coming to terms with the past, the protection and development of pluralism in Turkey. As a newspaper that has emerged from within the Armenian community of Turkey, Agos aims to further open its pages to the issues of Turkey and the world. As independent journalism and freedom of expression face increasing restriction in Turkey, Agos also acts as an independent platform for debate.